T-Mobile pulled something of a âOne More Thing!â this evening, with a bit of a surprise announcement tacked onto the end of their Uncarrier 5.0 event.
T-Mobile will no longer count data used on the âtop music streaming servicesâ (including Pandora, iTunes Radio, iHeartRadio, Slacker, Spotify, Samsungâs Milk service, and Rhapsody) against your data cap.
As it stands, most of T-Mobileâs plans give you an allotment of data (1GB, 3GB, or 5GB) which will work at full speed. Go past that allotment, and your download/stream speeds tank down to 3G speeds.
With this change, any data used on one of the aforementioned âtop music streaming servicesâ wonât count toward your cap. And if youâre already past your cap for the month? Data pulled from these services will continue to come down at the higher speed anyway.
Itâs certainly a good thing for any T-Mobile customers who might find themselves regularly blowing past their data caps, but⦠itâs a bit strange, from a net neutrality standpoint. By picking and choosing whose data does/doesnât count, T-Mobile is â" deliberately or not â" giving certain streaming services a boost. Since theyâre focusing on âtop servicesâ, itâs potentially a rich-gets-richer sort of thing.
Note, for example, the absence of Rdio from the list; with a simple act of omission, it becomes that much harder for Rdio (or, more importantly, any up-and-coming streaming service that may enter the market) to pull in any of T-Mobileâs 50 million customers.
Evil? Nah. Illegal? Nope! Itâs just something to consider as the ever-expanding Internet goes through its regulatory growing pains.
During the announcement, T-Mobileâs John Legere assured the audience that their initial picks for streaming services wasnât any sort of competitive/business move. Rather, it was a matter of technical implementation. Theyâve got to manually configure the network to whitelist each serviceâs myriad data sources, so they picked just eight to start. The goal, Legere says, is to include âevery music streaming serviceâ in the program; moving forward, theyâll invite customers to vote on which services get added next.
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